[MilCom] 21 4th Fighter Wing jets will fly in tribute to Ford
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domyers at voicenet.com
Mon Jan 1 07:56:50 EST 2007
21 4th Fighter Wing jets will fly in tribute to Ford
When former President Gerald Ford is laid to rest in his home state next week, members
of Seymour Johnson Air Force Base's 4th Fighter Wing will be among those present to pay
their respects.
Dozens of airmen will be in the skies over Grand Rapids, Mich., Wednesday, as F-15E
Strike Eagles have been requested to perform a 21-ship flyover and a missing-man
formation tribute in honor of the late president during the funeral service.
"For us, it is a tremendous and profound honor," Wing Comman-der Col. Steve Kwast said.
"The commander in chief is a symbol of what we do and why we serve our nation."
Preparations are already under way on base and this weekend, airmen from across the wing
will come together to make certain the former president is honored the way any great
leader should be, he added.
The nose of each Strike Eagle will be handpainted with a tribute to Ford, maintainers
will make sure the aircraft are ready to fly and aircrews will practice the formation
until they get it just right.
When the finished product is finally revealed and the eagles soar across the skies over
Grand Rapids Wednesday, there won't likely be a dry eye on the ground or in the sky,
Kwast said. And that is the way it should be.
"The reason it's so touching and strikes at the heart and soul of those watching is
because it's an analogy for all of us," he said. "When we die, our spirits are lifted to
a better place."
Ford, who died Tuesday at age 93, was the 38th president and has military ties that
extend back to his days as an officer in the Navy.
This is not the first time Seymour F-15s have taken part in a state funeral. In June
2004, a similar fleet flew over the funeral procession of former President Ronald
Reagan.
Kwast said he and the other men and women at Seymour were "humbled" by the news their
services had been requested to honor "another great leader."
"It has meaning on several levels," he said. "The nation could have chosen any wing to
do this and the fact that they chose us is a real honor -- not only for the people here
at Seymour Johnson, but for the whole community, Wayne County, North Carolina and
Goldsboro."
Kwast has attended state funerals before and seen military flybys. Even a fighter pilot
gets choked up at the sight of an F-15 -- symbolic of the soul -- climbing toward the
heavens, he said.
"It is a very visceral and emotional event," Kwast said. "There will never be a time
when I don't get chills and have a tear in my eye when a flyby happens."
Ford will lie in state in the U.S. Capitol this weekend before his interment in a tomb
near his presidential museum in Grand Rapids, where he lived as a child.
By Kenneth Fine
Published in News on December 29, 2006 01:53 PM
FROM THE GOLDSBORO NEWS_ARGUS newspaper 12/31/2006...
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